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The definitive edition of Catholic Worker cofounder Peter Maurin's
Easy Essays, including 74 previously unpublished works Although
Peter Maurin is well known among people connected to the Catholic
Worker movement, his Catholic Worker co-founder and mentee Dorothy
Day largely overshadowed him. Maurin was never the charismatic
leader that Day was, and some Workers found his idiosyncrasies
challenging. Reticent to write or even speak much about his
personal life, Maurin preferred to present his beliefs and ideas in
the form of Easy Essays, published in the New York Catholic Worker.
Featuring 482 of his essays, as well as 87 previously unpublished
ones, this text offers a great contribution to the corpus of
twentieth-century Catholic life. At first glance, Maurin's Easy
Essays appear overly simplistic and preposterous. But upon further
investigation, his essays are much more complex and nuanced. Packed
with demanding ideas meant to convey dense information and
encourage the listener to ponder different ways to understand and
interact with reality, his short poetic phrases became his modus
operandi for communicating his vision and became a hallmark of his
public theology. Each essay contained anywhere from one to ten or
more stanzas and were part of a larger arrangement, often titled.
Within the larger arrangements were individual essays, which were
also titled and arranged in such a manner as to support the overall
thesis. Many individual essays were later repeated in slightly
altered forms in new arrangements. Previous arrangements were also
repeated that omitted or added an essay. Providing scholarly and
contextual information for the modern reader, this annotated
collection includes more than 350 footnotes which offer a layer of
intelligibility that explains Maurin's use of obscure references to
historical people and events that would have been common knowledge
for readers during the 1930s. When appropriate, the footnotes
explain why Maurin chose to cite a person or event. A scholarly
Introduction offers a robust synthesis of contemporary scholarship
on Maurin and the Catholic Worker that considers radical
Catholicism and questions regarding race, ethnicity, religious
difference, and gender, because many of Maurin's essays take up
these themes. This book shapes the ways Maurin is read in the
present day and the ways leftist Catholicism is understood as part
of twentieth-century history.
The definitive edition of Catholic Worker cofounder Peter Maurin's
Easy Essays, including 74 previously unpublished works Although
Peter Maurin is well known among people connected to the Catholic
Worker movement, his Catholic Worker co-founder and mentee Dorothy
Day largely overshadowed him. Maurin was never the charismatic
leader that Day was, and some Workers found his idiosyncrasies
challenging. Reticent to write or even speak much about his
personal life, Maurin preferred to present his beliefs and ideas in
the form of Easy Essays, published in the New York Catholic Worker.
Featuring 482 of his essays, as well as 87 previously unpublished
ones, this text offers a great contribution to the corpus of
twentieth-century Catholic life. At first glance, Maurin's Easy
Essays appear overly simplistic and preposterous. But upon further
investigation, his essays are much more complex and nuanced. Packed
with demanding ideas meant to convey dense information and
encourage the listener to ponder different ways to understand and
interact with reality, his short poetic phrases became his modus
operandi for communicating his vision and became a hallmark of his
public theology. Each essay contained anywhere from one to ten or
more stanzas and were part of a larger arrangement, often titled.
Within the larger arrangements were individual essays, which were
also titled and arranged in such a manner as to support the overall
thesis. Many individual essays were later repeated in slightly
altered forms in new arrangements. Previous arrangements were also
repeated that omitted or added an essay. Providing scholarly and
contextual information for the modern reader, this annotated
collection includes more than 350 footnotes which offer a layer of
intelligibility that explains Maurin's use of obscure references to
historical people and events that would have been common knowledge
for readers during the 1930s. When appropriate, the footnotes
explain why Maurin chose to cite a person or event. A scholarly
Introduction offers a robust synthesis of contemporary scholarship
on Maurin and the Catholic Worker that considers radical
Catholicism and questions regarding race, ethnicity, religious
difference, and gender, because many of Maurin's essays take up
these themes. This book shapes the ways Maurin is read in the
present day and the ways leftist Catholicism is understood as part
of twentieth-century history.
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